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Prevention

When applying the philosophy of sustainable drainage, the adage "prevention is better than cure" can make practical economic sense. Managing the site can significantly reduce quality and quantity problems, and can provide improved amenity. Site management includes design and maintenance as well as the education of users.

Minimising runoff

Minimising paved areas

Runoff increases in proportion to the impervious area of the site. If the site is similar to its greenfield state, the runoff will also be similar. If less than 5 per cent of a site is paved or compacted, the impact on the quantity of the surface runoff will be negligible. The use of gravel limits the impervious area and gravelled surfaces can replace tarmac in parking areas on domestic driveways.

Reducing the amount of runoff also reduces the washoff of pollutants. Rainwater recycling can remove runoff from the drainage system altogether.

Minimising directly connected areas

Hard paving and roofed areas can be drained onto unpaved areas. Driveways and footpaths can be drained onto surrounding lawns. 

The surface water management train advocates the return of runoff to the natural drainage system as soon as possible.

Good housekeeping

The amount of pollution in the first flush of a storm will be minimised by keeping paved areas clean. Maintenance measures such as sweeping hard surfaces regularly will reduce pollution. Planned maintenance regimes should be used for all impermeable areas. Preventing the accumulation of contaminants is even more effective. For example, placing canopies over areas of potentially high contamination removes the risk of surface water runoff becoming polluted. Good housekeeping can be made easier by using proprietary systems. Silt traps, downpipe filters and petrol separators can be used to treat runoff before it reaches the drainage system.

Education

Informing and educating users of the site about the way the site is drained can help prevent contaminants from entering the drainage system. Pollutants that need to be controlled include:

These should be used carefully and disposed of properly, not poured down surface water drains. Fertilisers, herbicides and pesticides should be used sparingly, in accordance with the manufacturers’ instructions, and not used where they can be washed directly to a watercourse.

Litter and animal faeces can be kept out of drainage systems by education and provision of bins.

Road sweeping

Many contaminants can be removed by regular sweeping, before they are washed into the drainage system. Washing often moves the polluted material further along the drainage system where it may be more difficult to control. Sediment management in urban drainage catchments (CIRIA, 1995) gives further information.

Wrong connections

Connecting foul sewers to the surface water system causes pollution. The use of swales and permeable surfaces can limit these mis-connections by replacing underground surface water drains because there are no surface water pipes to connect to. If a foul connection is made to a SUDS, the source of pollution will soon become apparent.

Roads

Preventative measures include good practice during cleaning, winter maintenance and general maintenance. See Control of pollution from highway drainage discharges (CIRIA, 1994) for more information.

Containment

Some substances are so polluting that special measures must be taken to contain them and stop them reaching the drainage system. Risk assessments must be made and appropriate bunds and treatment facilities provided. Further details are given in the Design of containment systems for the prevention of water pollution from industrial incidents (CIRIA, 1997).

Oil separators are discussed in the pollution prevention guidelines PPG3 (The Environment Agency). FAQ include:

 

(02 July 2007)

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